Rachel Whiteread's Tree of Life voted best loved work of art of 2012 in a poll of museum goers

Voted in second place is Titians Diana and Callisto, acquired jointly by the National Gallery and the National Galleries of Scotland.

LONDON.- Rachel Whitereads glittering frieze Tree of Life has been voted the favourite work of art supported by the Art Fund in 2012, in a poll of museum goers.

Featuring clusters of leaves, cast in bronze and plated in gold leaf, Tree of Life covers the sculptural façade of the Whitechapel Gallery in East London and was commissioned as part of 2012s Cultural Olympiad. The Art Fund supported the commission with a £200,000 grant.

The work was inspired by both the Tree of Life, an Arts and Crafts motif adorning the gallery's towers, and 'Hackney weed', the urban plants that grow on buildings in the area.

Tree of LifeThe poll, which received nearly 4,000 votes, offered Art Fund supporters a chance to choose their favourite from a list of 16 works supported in 2012 by the national fundraising charity for art.

Voted in second place is Titians Diana and Callisto, acquired jointly by the National Gallery and the National Galleries of Scotland. It is one of the most celebrated and admired paintings in the European tradition and a companion piece to Titians Diana and Actaeon, also jointly acquired by the two galleries in 2009.

Nelsons Ship in a BottleClose behind in fourth place is Grayson Perrys The Vanity of Small Differences, a series of tapestries telling the story of class mobility and exploring the influence social class has on our aesthetic taste. The Art Fund has given support for these tapestries to be gifted into the Collections of the Arts Council and the British Council and will also be supporting the UK tour of the works in 2013-14.

The Vanity of Small DifferencesStephen Deuchar, Director of the Art Fund said: This year has been a golden year for acquisitions and the Art Fund has helped UK museums add a dazzling variety of work to their collections  from Old Masters, including exceptional paintings by Titian and Poussin, to new work by artists including Grayson Perry and Roger Hiorns. And Rachel Whitereads elegant commission for the Whitechapel Gallery, part of the Cultural Olympiad, was inevitably one of the highlights of our 2012. 